Kevin McCloud

Author

Birthday May 8, 1959

Birth Sign Taurus

Birthplace Bedfordshire, England

Age 64 years old

Height 1.89 m

#21188 Most Popular

1959

Kevin McCloud, (born 8 May 1959) is a British designer, writer, and television presenter.

1990

McCloud's first book, Kevin McCloud's Decorating Book, was published in 1990.

1995

The Techniques of Decorating and Kevin McCloud's Lighting Book were published in 1995, The Complete Decorator in 1996, Choosing Colours in 2003, Grand Designs Handbook: The Blueprint in 2006, and 43 Principles of Home: Enjoying Life in the 21st Century in 2010.

McCloud's first appearance on television was as a guest presenter on Homefront on BBC Two.

1999

He has presented the Channel 4 series Grand Designs since its debut in April 1999.

Born in Bedfordshire, McCloud and his two brothers, Terence and Graham, were raised in a house his parents had built.

McCloud attended Dunstable Grammar School, which became Manshead comprehensive, and after his A levels, went to work on a farm in Tuscany and study singing at the Conservatory of Music in Florence for a year.

Although he was offered a three-year course in Italy, he was persuaded to return to take up a place at Corpus Christi College, Cambridge, where he studied languages before changing to philosophy and finally settling on the history of art and architecture.

He was a member of the Footlights comedy ensemble at Cambridge alongside Stephen Fry and Hugh Laurie, working as a costume and set designer for the troupe.

After graduating, McCloud trained as a theatre designer, working on a wide variety of different productions, such as the set design for experimental rock group Harvey and the Wallbangers, before setting up his own lighting design practice and manufacturing business 'McCloud Lighting' – at one point employing 26 people.

His work includes the carved and painted rococo-style vegetable ceiling in the food halls at Harrods, many projects in conjunction with J.J. Desmond Interiors and lighting fittings at Ely Cathedral, Edinburgh Castle, the Savoy Hotel and the Dorchester Hotel.

Today he concentrates on television work, journalism and product design, including work for British manufacturers.

In 1999, he then went on to write and present Grand Designs, a programme covering unusual and elaborate architectural homebuilding projects, produced by Talkback Thames, which is now in its twenty-second series.

He also wrote and presented Grand Designs Indoors and Grand Designs Abroad.

In the course of the later series, McCloud demonstrated his fluency in French and Italian, occasionally acting as a translator for people who had houses built abroad in places where they didn't know the language.

2000

Other TV work has included Don't Look Down, in which McCloud examined the construction of tall buildings while climbing them, on BBC Two in 2000, Demolition on Channel 4 in 2005, The Stirling Prize: Building of the Year (in 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007 and 2008), and Kevin McCloud and the Big Town Plan on Channel 4 in August 2008.

2005

He is also editor-at-large for Grand Designs magazine, and sat on the steering committee for the associated exhibition "Grand Designs Live" in 2005 and 2006.

2007

In early 2007 he created HAB Housing Limited, ("Happiness, Architecture, Beauty").

McCloud led a consortium to purchase two plots of land to build a HAB housing development on the outskirts of Swindon, Wiltshire.

2008

In May 2008, McCloud took the Grand Designs series of programmes to a new level with Grand Designs Live, in which he demonstrated environmentally-sensitive construction methods on a site in the East End of London, as well as presenting a "Grand Design of the Year" competition.

His co-presenters included Dave Gorman, Janet Street-Porter, Naomi Cleaver, Diarmuid Gavin and Bill Bailey.

On 30 November 2008, he appeared as the Star in a Reasonably-Priced Car on Top Gear.

He finished with a time of 1:45.87, second on the leaderboard behind Jay Kay, who finished with 1:45.83.

2009

McCloud presented Kevin McCloud's Grand Tour on Channel 4 during the late summer and early autumn of 2009.

The four-part series saw McCloud retracing the popular tour of European cities and sites of classical antiquity undertaken over the last four centuries by upper class, primarily British, young men of means, and describing their subsequent impact on British customs and architecture.

In October 2009, it was announced that HAB Oakus, a joint venture between HAB and housing group GreenSquare, had won planning permission for its first housing scheme in Swindon.

The 42-home scheme, called The Triangle, would occupy the site of a former caravan park.

2010

In January 2010, McCloud fronted a two-part documentary, Kevin McCloud: Slumming It, detailing a two-week stay in Mumbai's Dharavi slum.

2011

In 2011, McCloud appeared on an episode of Carpool.

2012

In September 2012, McCloud presented Kevin McCloud's Man Made Home on Channel 4, a four-part series where he constructed a cabin in the woods, with an emphasis on sustainable, locally sourced and environmentally responsible materials and techniques.

2013

In 2013, the cabin was moved to the seaside near Watchet on the Somerset coast to film a second four-part series of the show with a more "beach shack" theme.

In August 2013, McCloud took part in the Blue Anchor to Minehead RNLI Raft Race, as part of the filming of the series.

His raft got 20 yards off shore before being towed the rest of the way.

2015

In June 2015, McCloud fronted Escape to the Wild.

He went to four different British families around the world who have left Britain behind to a life in far-flung remote destinations.

One on a desert island in the south Pacific nation of Tonga, one near a volcano in Chile, one in the middle of a jungle in Belize and the final family was a couple in Jämtland in Sweden.

He followed the daily lives of the families and uncovered how they perform daily tasks from securing food and water to using the toilet.

2020

McCloud's television series Kevin McCloud's Rough Guide to the Future, released in 2020, is a three-part series on Channel 4 featuring Alice Levine, Jon Richardson and Phil Wang.

The three comedians are sent around the world to take a light-hearted look at some of the planet's biggest issues and the technology that could offer solutions.

In 2020, McCloud narrated Celebrity Snoop Dogs, which gave viewers a chance to see inside celebrities' homes via a camera attached to the celebrities' dogs.